President Muhammadu Buhari has repeated a
controversial statement he made about recorded deaths in Nigeria’s
ongoing violence linked to suspected herdsmen.
During a
condolence visit to Taraba State on March 5, the president told his
audience in Jalingo, the state capital, that more people were killed in
Zamfara than Taraba and Benue states.
The comments generated
nationwide uproar, with many saying that not only was the president
factually incorrect, but also fuelling serious suspicion that could be
perceived from his seemingly partisan comments.
The opposition
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) also came down heavily on the president
for the remarks, describing it as divisive and ill-thought.
Mr
Buhari has not clarified his comments since then, and he doubled down
when he commented about it again during his recent trip to the United
States.
Asked by the Voice of Nigeria what other agreement he
sealed with President Donald Trump during their bilateral talks, Mr
Buhari responded as follows:
“Not agreements, just discussions.
The first one is the information being given to them that Christians are
being killed in Nigeria; but what happened in the Church also happened
in the South-east and the North and they just say it is herdsmen that
are killing them.
“Those making these allegations against the
herdsmen know that herdsmen, as we know them only carry sticks, going
about with guns is a new thing and those making the allegations know
that conflict between farmers and herders has a long history even before
we were born.
“Therefore, it is wrong to say the conflict is
between Fulani and Tiv or other tribes, like in Taraba. ‘What of
Zamfara, where more people were killed than in Taraba and Benue put
together’?
“People need to understand that it is mischief that makes people to bring in religion or ethnicity,” the president said.
States
affected by the ongoing killings by suspected herdsmen have largely
handled their crises individually without necessarily highlighting who
suffered more cassualties, but the president’s statement could now be
seen as a challenge for some states to frequently publish statistics
recorded in the unabated carnage.
The president holds that the
killings are perpetrated by possibly imported mercenaries with similarly
imported arms from Libya and other crises-plagued countries across the
Sahel.
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